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More Interview, because I cannot wait for Season 3 Â (getting caught up on posting art)
Do me a favour and reblog this with a show you like that was cancelled after only one season. I don't mean shows that were always meant to be miniseries or shows that work perfectly well as a standalone story, or shows that might still get renewed. I mean shows that are and will forever remain unfinished. The more obscure the better.
genuinely, chatgpt could NEVER recreate the euphoria of FINALLY figuring out a middle section to connect major points in your story.
me when I reblog a post specifically for my mutuals
The Smiths - (2026)
A proposal
Sometimes, in fandom, we just want to write id-tastic fic that rolls around in tropes that might be viewed as problematic. But we donât want to address the problematic side of things in this particular fanwork; we just want to roll around and wallow.
It is considered courteous to give readers a heads-up via use of AO3 tags. I propose a tag that signals that a given fanwork is for rolling around, not giving a measured evaluation of anything. The MCU has carved out a space for this sort of fic with the âHYDRA Trash Partyâ tag, for which I commend them. Trash Party is a bit too specific to cover all of the ground Iâm thinking of here, though; I propose âDead Dove: Do Not Eat.â
For those of you not familiar with Arrested Development, Michael Bluth finds a paper bag in the freezer labeled âDead Dove: Do Not Eat.â He opens the bag, finds a dead dove, and reacts as follows:
[gif of a white man saying âI donât know what I expectedâ in a deadpan manner]
The âDead Dove: Do Not Eatâ tag would essentially be a âwhat it says on the tinâ metatag, indicating âyou see the tropes and concepts tagged here? they are going to appear in this fic. exactly as said. there will not necessarily be any subversion, authorial commentary condemning problematic aspects, or meditation on potential harm. this fic contains dead dove. if you proceed, you should expect to encounter it.â
(more at KnowYourMeme: http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/i-dont-know-what-i-expected)
WHOA WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS THE POST THAT SPAWNED DEAD DOVE DO NOT EAT
Happy dead dove do not eat birthday!
If you could instantly be granted fluency in 5 languagesânot taking away your existing language proficiency in any way, solely a gainâwhat 5 would you choose?
bang bang
True storyâŚ
the fruits of lazy labor
Two days ago I finished the zero draft of a novel. It's about 53K and I wrote it in about six months by sticking to the 300 words a day thing. It's a trash heap of word chaos, and "finishing" it was akin to crashing a plane into the ground, but I'm still kind of floored that stringing small amounts of words on a page and forcing myself to write through a void of a middle actually gets things done. (Not a clean method mind you, I wrote 4 versions of chapter 11 until one stuck, but it still worked, albeit kind of arduously.)
After I finished the draft I panicked a bit, cause like, I didn't want to break the streak (289 days and counting) but I don't have another thing ready enough I can dive right into. So I've decided to draft a rough story outline for what I want to do next. It's a standalone fantasy/romance type thing, but there's a huge hole in the middle of it and I'm afraid to start it without knowing what needs to be there (I so suck at middles) so now my 300 a day is just writing what happens in the story. Kind of like a very robust outline. Lore, backstory, lead up, whatever informs the story and where it needs to go is going on the page. It's even looser writing than before which makes getting the words down much easier. But I feel like this will really give me a fighting chance to get through the next book.
So now, the real meat of my mental efforts is now being turned towards editing the prequel novella that I wrote in the middle of writing the novel. Three pages a day of editing is my quota. Again, not too big, not too small. I'm all about the tiny, tangible goals. Not gonna question a method that seems to be working. Also, I fucking love editing. I always forget that until I'm in it again.
I love it! Congrats on finishing that draft.
Yr "robust outline" sounds a lot like a film treatment. Have you ever read one? It's basically like the prose translation of what we see/hear onscreen. Minimal stage or camera direction, more just "Jesse is a 31 year old guy who overcame a rough background and now owns a plant store in a neighborhood that is becoming gentrified. After establishing shots of the block and building exterior on a grey morning with torrential rain, we see Jesse tending plants in the dimly-lit shop. Over his shoulder, we see vague motion through the plate glass front window, focus shifts, and outside the shop is a very rain-bedraggled man (Santos, 28, project manager at MegaGardenCo). Jesse watches him struggle with a broken umbrella he throws away in disgust, but quickly jogs over to pick out of the gutter. As Santos looks around for a more suitable place to ditch the umbrella skeleton, Jesse takes pity, unlocks the front door and invites Santos to come inside the shop and take shelter from the rain."
Well that got away from me. No, I'm not writing that "You've Got Mail" plant boutique/Home Depot gay romance unless whoever was the lit agent for that hockey thing agrees to represent the book and shop film rights.
ANYWAY.
I love any kind of non-traditional "outline." The story of the story, the notes, the scraps of dialog, the scene-saving phrase that came to you in a dream and you scribbled it in sharpie on yr forearm first thing upon waking so it didn't get lost. I find it helpful for planning and energising for writing; I hope you find yr mysterious middle!
Congrats again, I'm proud of you!
Interesting !I havenât read a film treatment before thatâs so very cool. Itâs a very interesting way to translate a visual medium. I went to a lecture once by Steff Green, sheâs this prolific, spooky romance, writer, and her method is first writing the 10K version of her book which is just like a exposition dump with bits of dialogue, and then she keeps on expanding from that 10k nugget and turns it into like an actual book by doing rounds and rounds of expansion. I think she calls it skeleton drafting.
I donât think thatâs my thing per se, but I think it is kind of a skeleton draft. Pre-zero, just the facts, mostly exposition⌠weâll see as itâs kind of my first time trying it this way! I never used to be an outliner, itâs interesting how our methodology changes and adapts overtime.
Whatâs your method @fuckyeahfightlock ? Are you a pantser or a plotter?
the fruits of lazy labor
Two days ago I finished the zero draft of a novel. It's about 53K and I wrote it in about six months by sticking to the 300 words a day thing. It's a trash heap of word chaos, and "finishing" it was akin to crashing a plane into the ground, but I'm still kind of floored that stringing small amounts of words on a page and forcing myself to write through a void of a middle actually gets things done. (Not a clean method mind you, I wrote 4 versions of chapter 11 until one stuck, but it still worked, albeit kind of arduously.)
After I finished the draft I panicked a bit, cause like, I didn't want to break the streak (289 days and counting) but I don't have another thing ready enough I can dive right into. So I've decided to draft a rough story outline for what I want to do next. It's a standalone fantasy/romance type thing, but there's a huge hole in the middle of it and I'm afraid to start it without knowing what needs to be there (I so suck at middles) so now my 300 a day is just writing what happens in the story. Kind of like a very robust outline. Lore, backstory, lead up, whatever informs the story and where it needs to go is going on the page. It's even looser writing than before which makes getting the words down much easier. But I feel like this will really give me a fighting chance to get through the next book.
So now, the real meat of my mental efforts is now being turned towards editing the prequel novella that I wrote in the middle of writing the novel. Three pages a day of editing is my quota. Again, not too big, not too small. I'm all about the tiny, tangible goals. Not gonna question a method that seems to be working. Also, I fucking love editing. I always forget that until I'm in it again.
Captain America Brave New World 1st Anniversay
isanayoruho on twitter
OMG yr Ask box text is a Smiths reference. COULD I LOVE YOU MORE??? I could not. Or at least I barely could.
ANYWAY.
Just popping in to say that yr "100 words a day to eliminate 'writer's block' " hack is GENIUS. I've been doing it for almost 3 weeks now. It really is doing something important to my perfectionist brain (perfection being the enemy of done). It means undeniable, reliable, constant forward progress. It's not intimidating after a very long fallow period and a total loss of my former Ass In Chair habit/ethic. It generates momentum such that I actually have to STOP myself from continuing to write, which will serve me so well once this feels like a firmly established habit and I'm ready to go up to 200 words a day, 300 words, 20 minutes, 40 minutes, or whatever benchmark feels sustainable. Having to stop means I have "the next part" ever to hand, which makes starting the 100 words the next day just so much easier. For a person with low spirits about a sleeping creative impulse. . .what a gift it was to me that you shared this. Buddy, I owe you one!
OMG YAY!!!! I saw you mentioning recently that you were working on things again and then you posted a new fic and I was like very very excited because I knew you hadnât been writing for awhile⌠This makes me so happy!!! It still seems to be working for me as well. â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸ THIS IS SO GREAT!!! â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸